u/RoryAtDMI ·
Reddit — r/ValueInvesting
· June 08, 2026 at 13:23
· ⬆ 43 pts
· 💬 81 comments
| View on Reddit ↗
AI Summary
Summary
The post argues that Adobe (ADBE) is a value pick due to its near-9% forward earnings yield, high enterprise retention (94-96%), and deeply embedded workflows that make switching costly for customers.
Author uses interviews with industry professionals to support the thesis that Adobe's Creative Suite is nearly non-optional for agencies and enterprises, giving the company strong pricing power and margin expansion potential.
Quality assessment: Well-researched DD with primary source interviews and relevant financial metrics; however, it leans heavily on qualitative industry anecdotes and does not fully quantify AI disruption risks.
Score43
Comments81
Upvote %88%
▶ Full Post Text
First time poster, long time reader!
***Adobe*** **looks like a great value pick right now, so I'm starting there.**
[I've just published ](https://open.substack.com/pub/durableinvesting/p/adobestockanalysis-unbreakable-or-on-the-brink?r=8iygzz&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web)[my first post](https://open.substack.com/pub/durableinvesting/p/adobestockanalysis-unbreakable-or-on-the-brink?r=8iygzz&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web) on SS, analysing the business from the views of those in the industry. It's been insightful & given me conviction. I'd love to get feedback from disciplined investors?
Here's the **TLDR**:
* $ADBE at a forward O/E **Yield of nearly 9%** at the time of writing, the Digital Media business just needs to survive at these levels to give investors a real chance of outperforming
* I’ve worked with users closely and found Adobe's Suite entirely **embedded in workflows**. Unless marketing goes extinct, Adobe licenses are mostly non-optional.
* The brand has HUGE salience & stickiness but not always love... just check out the subreddit r/FuckAdobe
* Ad agencies (IPA survey) say timelines have dropped (**70%)** due to AI, but asset requirements have multiplied **5x**. Headcounts have already fallen (-14.3% YoY: IPA)
* **Yet:** Adobe’s ETLA retention remains at **94%-96%** and revenue growth continues
* A Midweight designer told me: “You won’t find enterprises using only non-Adobe tools, they can’t deal with .ai & .indd formats… **way too risky**”
* Agency Pro: 'clients are integrated into the Adobe ecosystem, so switching isn't worth it… **it just creates a time bomb** before a client send you something incompatible.'
* Management might cut creative headcount to juice margins, but are unlikely to **risk operational supply-chain failure to save an $80/m software subscription**.
* “The single most important decision in evaluating a business is **pricing power”(** Buffett) Gross margins are still exceptional and growing – approaching **90%**
* **It means competitors are heavily incentivised** to try to take share from Adobe’s highly profitable products though, but have an uphill battle to do so.
I'd appreciate feedback from investors, especially those who disagree with the thesis. Part 2 will focus on the bear case and key risks.
Adobe’s enterprise ETLA retention is 94-96%, gross margins approach 90%, and the business trades at a forward earnings yield of ~9%. If Adobe merely sustains its current Digital Media revenue, the valuation alone offers a margin of safety; embedded workflows and high switching costs further protect the moat. Adobe is a durable value compounder with pricing power that the market currently discounts, presenting a long opportunity for disciplined investors. Loss of the beginner/amateur market to simpler AI tools like Capcut could erode the future pipeline of professional users; AI-driven headcount reductions may reduce license demand over time.